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Herbie Hancock

Herbert Jeffrey Hancock (born April 12, 1940) is a jazz pianist and composer from Chicago, Illinois, USA. Hancock is one of jazz music's most important and influential pianists and composers. He embraced elements of rock, funk, and soul while adopting freer stylistic elements from jazz.

As part of Miles Davis' "second great quintet" Hancock helped redefine the role of a jazz rhythm section, and was later one of the first jazz musicians to embrace synthesizers and hip hop. Yet for all his restless experimentalism, Hancock's music is often melodic and accessable; he has had many songs "crossover" and achieve success among pop audiences.

Hancock's best-known solo works include "Cantaloupe Island", "Watermelon Man" (first on 1963's Takin' Off, then on 1973's Head Hunters and later perfomed by dozens of musicians, including bandleader Mongo Santamaria), George Gershwin's "Summertime", and the single "Rockit."

Contents

Early life

Like many jazz pianists, Hancock started with a classical music education; Hancock studied from age seven. His talent was recognized early, and he played the first movement of a Mozart concerto at a young people’s concert with the Chicago Symphony at age eleven.

Through his teens, Hancock never had a jazz teacher. Instead, around college age, Hancock grew to like jazz after hearing some Oscar Peterson and George Shearing recordings, which he transcribed on his own time, and which developed his ear and sense of harmony. Hancock also listened to other pianists, including McCoy Tyner, Wynton Kelly and Bill Evans. He also liked recordings by Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Lee Morgan.

Donald Byrd hired Hancock in 1961, and the pianist quickly earned a reputation. He recorded his first solo album for Blue Note Records in 1962, it was the first of dozens of albums Hancock would lead in the coming decades.

Miles Davis quintet

Hancock received considerable attention when, in 1963, he joined Miles Davis' "second great quintet". This new band was basically Miles Davis surrounded by fresh, new talent. Davis personally sought out Hancock, then one of the most promissing talents in jazz. The rhythm section Davis organized was young but effective, comprised of bassist Ron Carter, seventeen year old drummer Tony Williams, and Hancock on piano. After Sam Rivers then George Coleman passed through quickly, the quintet would gel with Wayne Shorter on tenor saxophone. This quintet is often regarded as one of the finest jazz ensembles, and the rhythm section has been espeically praised for their innovation and flexibility.

The second great quintet is the place where Hancock found his own unique voice as a master of jazz piano. Not only did he find new ways to use common chords, he also popularized chords then-rarely used in jazz. Hancock also developed a unique taste for "orchestral" accompaniment with stark contrasts then unheard of in jazz (listen to one of the famous live versions of "My Funny Valentine" recorded by the quintet).

With Williams and Carter he would weave a labyrinth of rhythmic intricacy on, around and over existing melodic and chordal schemes. In the latter half of the sixties their approach would be so sophisticated and unorthodox that conventional chord changess would hardly be discernable, hence their improvisational concept would somewhat inaccurately be called "Time, No Changes".

In 1969, Hancock left Davis' band to form his own sextet, although he was formally kicked out under the pretext that he was late coming back from a honeymoon in Brazil. Davis would soon disband his quartet to search for a new sound himself. Herbie Hancock would occasionally appear on records by the "Electric" Miles Davis bands.

Mwandishi

Hancock was fascinated with accumulating musical gadgets and toys. Together with the profound influence of Davis' Bitches' Brew, this fascination would culminate in a series of albums in which electronic instruments are coupled with acoustic instruments.

Hancock's first ventures into electronic territory started with a sextet comprised of Hancock, drummer Billy Hart and bassist Buster Williams , and a trio of adventurous horn players: Eddie Henderson (trumpet), Julian Priester , (trombone), and multireedist Bennie Maupin .

The sextet made three experimental albums; the music sometimes bordering on free jazz and electronic music from contemporary classical composers. These records became later known as the "Mwandishi" albums, so-called after a Swahili name Hancock sometimes used. Of these three albums Sextant is the most pregnantly experimental.

Among the instruments Hancock utilzed were Fender Rhodes piano, ARP Odessey , ARP Pro-Soloist Synthesizer and the Minimoog. He was one of the first mainstream musicians to use an Apple computer in creating music in the early 1970s.

Headhunters

After the sometimes "airy" and decidely experiemental "Mwandishi" albums, Hancock was eager to perform more "earthy" and "funky" music. He gathered a new band, which he called The Headhunters, keeping only Maupin from the sextet. The album Head Hunters released in 1973, was a major hit, and crossed over to pop audiences, though it prompted criticism from some jazz fans.

Despite charges of "selling out," later ears have regarded the album well: "Head Hunters still sounds fresh and vital two decades after its initial release, and its genre-bending proved vastly influential on not only jazz, but funk, soul, and hip-hop." Allmusic.com entry

Hancock released several more albums with The Headhunters in the 1970s, had disbanded by 1980, then reunited in 1998 for a final album.

Rockit and 'Round Midnight

In 1982, Hancock had a mainstream hit with the Grammy-award winning instrumental single "Rockit" from the album Future Shock –perhaps the first mainstream single to feature scratching–which also featured an innovative animated music video with a breakdancing robot. This single ushered in a collaboration with noted bassist and producer Bill Laswell where Hancock experimented with electronic music on a string of three LPs produced by Laswell, Future Shock (1983), Sound System and Perfect Machine .

In 1986 Hancock played and acted in the film 'Round Midnight. He also wrote the score, for which he won an Academy Award for Original Music Score. Often he would write music for TV commercials. “Maiden Voyage,” in fact, started out as a cologne advertisement. He also wrote the theme music to Bill Cosby’s show, “Fat Albert.”

1990s and later

Hancock has remained active in music. 1995's The New Standard found him interpreting pop songs by Nirvana, Stevie Wonder, The Beatles and others. He revisited his tenure with Davis with a quintet including Michael Brecker and Roy Hargrove . Hancock's experimentalism continues: Dis Is Da Drum (1993) featured new hip hop sounds, and 2001's Future 2 Future (again a collaboration with Laswell) had doses of electronica.

Other aspects of his life

Hancock is a Buddhist, and writes about the influence Buddhism has had on his life and his music in the introduction he wrote to the nonfiction bestseller The Buddha In Your Mirror.

Discography

  • Takin' Off (1962) – Blue Note
  • Inventions And Dimensions (1963) – Blue Note
  • My Point Of View (1963) – Blue Note
  • Empyrean Isles (1964) – Blue Note
  • Maiden Voyage (1965) – Blue note
  • Blow Up (1966) – MGM
  • Speak Like A Child (1968) – Blue Note
  • The Prisoner (1969) – Blue Note
  • Fat Albert Rotunda (1969) – Warner Bros
  • Mwandishi (1970) – Warner Bros
  • Crossings (1971) – Warner Bros
  • Sextant (1972) – Columbia
  • Head Hunters (1973) – Columbia
  • Thrust (1974) – Columbia
  • Death Wish (Soundtrack) (1974) – Columbia
  • Man-Child (1975) – Columbia
  • Flood (1975) – Columbia
  • Secrets (1976) – Columbia
  • V.S.O.P. (1977) – Columbia
  • Feets Don't Fail Me Now (1978) – Columbia
  • Sunlight (1978) – Columbia
  • Monster (1979) – Columbia
  • Mr. Hands (1980) – Columbia
  • Magic Windows (1980) – Columbia
  • Quartet (1981) – Columbia
  • Lite Me Up (1981) – Columbia
  • Future Shock (1983) – Columbia
  • Sound System (1983) – Columbia
  • Perfect Machine (1988) – Columbia
  • A Tribute To Miles Davis (1992) – Quest
  • Dis Is Da Drum (1995) – Mercury
  • The New Standard (1996) – Verve
  • 1 & 1 (with Wayne Shorter) (1997) – Verve
  • Future 2 Future (2001) – Transparent

Awards

  • MTV Awards (5 awards in total) - Best Concept Video - Rockit 1983-84
  • Grammy - Best R&B Instrumental Performance - Rockit" 1983
  • Keyboard Magazine Readers Poll - Best Jazz & Pop Keyboardist 1983
  • Grammy - Best R&B instrumental Performance - Sound system 1984
  • Gold Note Jazz Awards - NY chapter National Black MBA association 1985
  • Playboy Music Poll Jazz Group 1985
  • Playboy Music Poll Playboy Music Poll 1985
  • Playboy Music Poll "Best Jazz Album - Rockit" 1985
  • French Award Officer of the Order of Arts & Letters-Paris 1985
  • Oscar "Best Original Score - Round Midnight" 1986
  • BMI Film Music Award "Round Midnight" 1986
  • Playboy Music Poll Jazz Keyboards 1986
  • U.S. Radio award "Best Original Music Scoring - Thom McAnn Shoes" 1986
  • Los Angeles Film Critics Association "Best Score - Round Midnight" 1986
  • Grammy "Best Original Composition - Call Sheet Blues" 1987
  • Playboy Music Poll R&B Instrumentalist 1987
  • Keyboard Magazine Readers Poll Jazz Pianist 1987
  • Keyboard Magazine Readers Poll Jazz Keyboardist 1987
  • Keyboard Magazine Readers Poll Best Jazz Pianist 1988
  • BMI TV/Film award 25 Years of Affiliation 1988
  • Playboy Music Poll Jazz Instrumentalist 1988
  • BMI Film Music Award "Colors" 1989
  • Grammy "Best Jazz Instrumentalal by a Group - Tribute To Miles" 1994
  • Grammy "The New Standard" 1996
  • Soul train Music Award "Best jazz album - The New Standard" 1997
  • Festival International Jazz de Montreal Prix Miles Davis 1997
  • VH1's 100 Greatest Videos "Rockit" is "10th Greatest Video" 2001

Samples

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Last updated: 11-07-2004 20:45:03